1 Suggested Answer

Hi,
A 6ya expert can help you resolve that issue over the phone in a minute or two.
Best thing about this new service is that you are never placed on hold and get to talk to real repairmen in the US.
The service is completely free and covers almost anything you can think of (from cars to computers, handyman, and even drones).click here to download the app (for users in the US for now) and get all the help you need. Good luck!

Tell us some more! Your answer needs to include more details to help people.You can't post answers that contain an email address.Please enter a valid email address.The email address entered is already associated to an account.Login to postPlease use English characters only.

This is the indicator configuration for the 2600, if the lights are yellow there is a problem.

The following indicator LEDs provide power, activity, and status information:
• POWER (green)—Lit when power is on
• RPS (green)
– Off—No redundant power supply (RPS) is present
– Blinking—System is booted, RPS is present, RPS failure
– Continuous on—System is booted, RPS is present, no RPS failure
• ACTIVITY (green)
– Slow, steady blinking—System is booting
– Blinks during system activity, such as interrupts and packet transfers
I suggest going to Cisco.com for full documentation on this product.

I recently had a client switch do this to me. The only way to get it working was to manually put the NIC on my laptop to 10 Mb and Half duplex. After calling Cisco and opening a TAC case, it was deemed faulty hardware.

If you have SmartNet (anyone buying Cisco should always buy SmartNet) on the switch, call TAC and open a case. It's probably faulty hardware.